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Suppression of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria in intermittently membrane-aerated biofilms: a model-based explanation Yunjie Ma, Carlos Domingo-Félez, Benedek Gy Plosz, and Barth F. Smets Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 27 Apr 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 1, 2017
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Suppression of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria in intermittently
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membrane-aerated biofilms: a model-based explanation
3 Yunjie Ma, Carlos Domingo-Félez, Benedek Gy. Plósz†, and Barth F. Smets*
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Department of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Miljøvej Building 113, 2800
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Kongens Lyngby, Denmark.
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* Corresponding Author: E-mail:
[email protected], Tel: +45 4525 1600 Fax: +45 4593 2850 †
Current address: Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Bath, Claverton Down, BA2 7AY Bath, United Kingdom.
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Abstract
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Autotrophic ammonium oxidation in membrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs) can make treatment of
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ammonium-rich wastewaters more energy-efficient, especially within the context of short-cut ammonium
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removal. The challenge is to exclusively enrich ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). To achieve nitritation,
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strategies to suppress nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) are needed, which are ideally grounded on an
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understanding of underlying mechanisms. In this study, a counter-diffusion nitrifying biofilm reactor was
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operated under intermittent aeration. During eight months operation, AOB dominated, while NOB were
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suppressed. Based on dissolved oxygen (DO), ammonium, nitrite and nitrate profiles within the biofilm and
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in the bulk, a 1-dimensional nitrifying biofilm model was developed and calibrated. The model was utilized
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to explore the potential mechanisms of NOB suppression associated with intermittent aeration, considering
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DO limitation, direct pH effects on enzymatic activities, and indirect pH effects on activity via substrate
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speciation. The model predicted strong periodic shifts in the spatial gradients of DO, pH, free ammonia and
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free nitrous acid, associated with aerated and non-aerated phases. NOB suppression during intermittent
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aeration was mostly explained by periodic inhibition caused by free ammonia due to transient periodic pH
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upshifts. Dissolved oxygen limitation did not govern NOB suppression. Different intermittent aeration
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strategies were then evaluated for nitritation success in intermittently aerated MABRs: both aeration
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intermittency and duration were effective control parameters.
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Introduction
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Short-cut ammonium (NH4 ) removal via nitrite (NO2 ) is more energy- and cost- efficient than traditional
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NH4 removal via nitrate (NO3 ) due to reduced aeration and external electron donor requirements.1,2,3 This
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process requires full nitritation (oxidation of all NH4 to NO2 ) and zero nitratation (oxidation of none of the
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NO2 to NO3 ); in other words minimal activity of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) and maximal activity of
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ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). Similar conditions– with only partial nitritation- can also be exploited
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to convert NH4 to a 50:50 mixture of NO2 and NH4 , which can then be coupled to anoxic NH4 oxidation
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to attain even more resource efficient ammonium removal.4,5
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Various conditions have been successfully tested to suppress NOB over AOB activity or wash-out NOB over
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AOB biomass to attain nitritation in suspended growth systems. They include the operation of bioreactors at
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limited dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations,6 at high temperature combined with low solids retention
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times,1 and at elevated free ammonia (FA) and/or free nitrous acid (FNA) concentrations.7 In all cases NOB
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suppression or outcompetition versus AOB is based on differential growth kinetics. Sometimes, the proper
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choice of system inoculum also accelerates AOB over NOB selection.8 By contrast, maintaining long-term
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nitritation in biofilm-based reactors can be more challenging9 due to long solids retention times in biofilms
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that interfere with outcompetition based on kinetic principles. Finding operational conditions and confirming
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mechanisms that suppress NOB in biofilms remains a challenge. On the one hand, the existence of strong
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spatial chemical gradients (e.g. of DO, pH and nitrogenous species) in nitrifying biofilms10 makes it difficult
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to prescribe environmental conditions that favor AOB over NOB in the system. On the other hand, the
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existence of multiple simultaneous chemical gradients complicates identification of the underlying
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mechanism(s) that suppresses NOB. For example, pH and DO gradients occur simultaneously in active
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nitrifying biofilms:11 it is difficult to unravel to what extent nitritation failure or success is associated with
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the differential effect of oxygen (AOB and NOB having different oxygen affinities)12 or the differential
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effects of pH (AOB and NOB responding differently to pH– as a consequence of the pH-dependent
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maximum growth rates13,14 and the pH-dependent speciation of FA and FNA which act as both substrates and
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inhibitors).
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Mathematical models are one way to describe multiple processes that occur simultaneously in time and space
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in nitrifying biofilms.15,16 A multi-species nitrifying biofilm model (MSNBM) was explicitly developed to
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study the competition between AOB and NOB; effects of DO, pH, FA and FNA on growth kinetics were
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incorporated in a spatially explicit way to evaluate operational conditions for NOB suppression in co-
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diffusion biofilms.3,17 Park et al.17 showed that FA inhibition of NOB was more efficient in nascent biofilms
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(when residual NH4 was still high), but that DO limitation was the dominant mechanism of NOB
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suppression in established biofilms. Besides bulk DO and influent NH4 concentration, the model suggested
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that bulk buffer capacity was another means to manipulate NOB suppression by affecting pH gradients
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within biofilms.
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While AOB/NOB competition in conventional co-diffusion biofilms has been studied in some detail,3,17,18
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there are less studies on AOB/NOB competition in the context of nitritation in counter-diffusion biofilms.
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Counter–diffusion biofilms develop in membrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs), where air delivery is
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via the biofilm base.19 MABRs have been broadly explored for autotrophic N removal.11,20,21 In counter-
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diffusion nitrifying MABRs, active bacteria thrive at the base of the biofilm, where they utilize oxygen
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supplied from the membrane lumen. Growth of bacteria– including NOB- at the biofilm base would limit the
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chance for outcompetition, once established, due to spatial protection by the overlying biofilm layers.
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Efficient operation of MABRs to attain long-term nitritation has, to our knowledge, not been documented,
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with the exception of one, highly-loaded (33 g-N/m2/day) fully NH4 penetrated MABR where controlling
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DO concentrations at the membrane-biofilm interface sufficed to maintain nitritation.22
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Recently, Pellicer-Nàcher et al.21 observed that fully nitratation MABRs accumulated NO2 immediately after
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switching from continuous to intermittent aeration, even at elevated oxygen loadings. The causal link
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between nitritation onset and aeration regime change were not explored. Here we report additional
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experimental evidence of NOB suppression in intermittently aerated MABRs and we develop and calibrate
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an improved MSNBM incorporating explicit pH calculation. Using the calibrated model, we systematically
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evaluate potential causes for NOB suppression associated with intermittent aeration. From this analysis, we
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identify the periodic FA inhibition- caused by transient pH upshifts and decreases at the biofilm base- as the
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likely key cause for NOB suppression. A suitable operational window for an effective nitritation control in
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counter-diffusion systems is finally proposed.
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Materials and Methods
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2.1 Reactor Operation and Measurement Methods
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Reactor Configuration and Operation
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The counter-diffusion MABRs consisted of two tubular gas filled PDMS membranes (3100506, Labmarket,
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Germany), both fixed in parallel to its longer dimension (Figure S1). The system had a liquid volume of 0.83
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L (reactors: 31.5×5×3.5 cm) and was inoculated with enriched nitrifying biomass.21 To start up the system,
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the reactor was first run in a batch mode with an initial NH4+ concentration at 300 mg-N/L and continuous
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aeration. The onset of NH4+ consumption without oxygen accumulation in the bulk suggested biomass
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attachment around the membranes. Subsequently, the MABR was operated in continuous flow mode under
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intermittent aeration. Synthetic wastewater was fed continuously with an NH4+ concentration at 75 mg-N/L
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and without external organic carbon. Hydraulic retention time was 12 hours. The intermittent aeration
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strategy consisted of a 6-hour aeration period (100% air) followed by a 6-hour non-aeration period (100%
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N2). The aeration cycles were controlled by a set of solenoid valves and the pressure in the lumen was 35
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kPa. The bulk phase was completely mixed by recirculating at 1.5 L/min. DO and pH were measured with
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electrodes in the recirculation line (CellOX 325 and Sentix 41, WTW, Germany). Bulk pH was not
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controlled and remained at 7.2±0.2 due to adequate buffer capacity (molar ratio in the influent: HCO3-/NH4+
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= 2.1). Reactor temperature was at 32.5 ±0.7°C, which was above ambient temperature due to the
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unintentional heat added by the recirculation pump. The working temperature was not controlled to a lower
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value, as temperature effect on nitritation success in MABRs is minor.23,24 N concentrations (NH4 , NO2 and
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NO3 ) were measured with colorimetric test kits (Spectroquant 14776, 00683, 09713; Merck, Germany).
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Microelectrode Measurements
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Commercially available DO microelectrode (OX-10, Unisense, Denmark) and lab-made potentiometric
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microelectrodes for NH4 , NO2 and NO3 25 were used for in-situ profiling measurements within the biofilm.
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Profiling measurements were performed after biofilms reaching steady state. Microelectrodes were
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controlled by a motorized micromanipulator to a precision up to 10 µm, and began from the top of the
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biofilm. During measurements, the influent and recirculation were kept unchanged. For each profile,
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replicates (n > 3) were made and the average was considered in model fitting. Besides calibration following
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the protocols, the signal drift of N-species sensors over time was corrected by measuring N concentrations
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from effluent before and after profiling.
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2.2 Model Development
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The MSNBM is a one-dimensional model based on Terada et al.,26 incorporating additional explicit pH
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calculation (Table S1). It was implemented in AQUASIM V2.1 with two compartments: a completely mixed
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gas compartment and a biofilm compartment containing biofilm and bulk liquid.27 In the counter-diffusion
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regime, a physical diffusion link connects the gas compartment to the base of the biofilm, defined as
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𝐴 ∙ 𝑘𝑀,𝑖 (𝐻 𝐶𝑖,𝑎𝑖𝑟 − 𝐶𝑖,𝑏𝑎𝑠𝑒 )
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where Ci,air and Ci,base are concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) or oxygen (O2) in the gas compartment and
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at the biofilm base (mg/L), H is the non-dimensional Henry’s Law coefficient (1.32 for CO2, 34.55 for O2,
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33 ℃), kM,i is the silicone membrane gas mass transfer coefficient (kM,O2 = 6 m/d, kM,CO2 = 0.8 m/d, Table S3).
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Gas transfer of N2 and NH3 are not modeled. Other major modeling assumptions- regarding biofilm structure,
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diffusion mass transfer and boundary layer thickness are as in Terada et al.26 Process rate expressions are
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shown (Table S2). The calibrated nitrification model incorporating pH is available from the corresponding
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author.
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Biological Processes
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The MSNBM includes 3 active microbial groups- AOB, NOB, heterotrophs (HB) and inerts accumulated
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during decay processes. For the two-step nitrification process, FA and FNA are considered as true substrates
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for growth and inhibition in nitritation and nitratation.28 The growth rate expressions are described as follows,
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AOB: 𝜇𝐴𝑂𝐵 · 𝑋𝐴𝑂𝐵 ·
1
(1)
𝑖
𝑆𝑂2 𝐴𝑂𝐵 +𝑆 𝐾𝑂2 𝑂2
·
𝑆𝐹𝐴 𝐴𝑂𝐵 +𝑆 +𝑆 ·𝑆 ⁄𝐾 𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐹𝐴 𝐹𝐴 𝐹𝐴 𝐹𝐴 𝐼,𝐹𝐴
·
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝑁𝐴 𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝑁𝐴 +𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴
(2)
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𝑆𝑂2 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝑂2 +𝑆𝑂2
·
𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐹𝑁𝐴 +𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴 +𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴 ·𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴 ⁄𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝑁𝐴
NOB: 𝜇𝑁𝑂𝐵 · 𝑋𝑁𝑂𝐵 ·
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where μ is the specific growth rate coefficient (1/day), dependent on local pH and 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 ; 𝑆𝑂2, 𝑆𝐹𝐴 and 𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴
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are O2, FA and FNA concentrations (mg/L), respectively; 𝐾𝑂2 , 𝐾𝐹𝐴 and 𝐾𝐹𝑁𝐴 are half-saturation coefficients
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(mg/L);𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 and 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝑁𝐴 are inhibition coefficients (mg/L). Growth substrate inhibition (FA for AOB, FNA
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for NOB) is incorporated with the Andrews equation. Other types of inhibition (FA for NOB, FNA for AOB)
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are described with a noncompetitive inhibition term, as routinely done in similar studies.28, 29
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For the denitrification process, NO2- and NO3- are modeled as separate electron acceptors. To avoid
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unnecessary complexity and focus on AOB/NOB competition, no intermediates (NO or N2O) are considered.
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Bacteria have different decay rates in aeration and non-aeration periods: to simplify the model, AOB/NOB
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are assumed not to decay under anoxic or anaerobic conditions,30 meanwhile, HB decay is modified by an
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anoxic reduction factor during non-aeration periods.
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Chemical Process: pH Calculation
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The one-dimensional model can keep track of local pH changes perpendicular to the membrane substratum.
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pH along biofilm depth is calculated based on the proton production via nitrification and consumption via
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denitrification, the equilibrium reaction with bicarbonate buffer, and CO2 stripping to the membrane lumen.
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The consumption of inorganic carbon for autotrophic growth is neglected as it has insignificant influence on
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pH changes under conditions when inorganic carbon is not limiting.
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Protons produced and consumed in bioprocesses are listed in the stoichiometry matrix. The acid-base
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balance reaction with bicarbonate buffer is assumed to occur much faster than biological processes.31
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𝐻 + + 𝐻𝐶𝑂3− ↔ 𝐻2 𝐶𝑂3 (𝐶𝑂2 )
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where SH, SHCO3- and SH2CO3(CO2) are concentrations of proton, bicarbonate and the sum of carbonic acid and
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dissolved carbon dioxide, respectively (μmol/L); 𝐾𝑎,𝐻𝐶𝑂3 is the dissociation equilibrium constant of carbonic
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acid (0.574 μmol/L, 33 ℃, 1 atm). Protons produced in the nitritation process titrate HCO3- to H2CO3, and
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over-saturated CO2 diffuses from the biofilm base to the membrane lumen (Equation 1). Acid-base reactions
𝑆𝐻𝐶𝑂3− ·𝑆𝐻 𝐾𝑎,𝐻𝐶𝑂3
rate: (
·
𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 +𝑆𝐹𝐴
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− 𝑆𝐶𝑂2 ) · 107
(3)
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with phosphate ions were minor and neglected, as the molar ratio of H2PO4-/HCO3- in influent was lower
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than 3%.
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Limitations/Inhibitions of AOB/NOB Activity
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The growth rate expressions of AOB and NOB consider DO and pH effects. DO limitation is assessed by
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oxygen affinity constants. Two pH effects are included. (1) pH-enzyme effect: pH can affect nitrifying
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activity directly by changing the enzyme reaction mechanism or increasing the demand for maintenance
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energy.31,32 A Gaussian bell-shaped curve is chosen to model the pH-enzyme dependency of specific growth
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rates.13
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μ=
164
where 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 is the maximum specific growth rate at the optimal pH- 𝑝𝐻𝑜𝑝𝑡 , ω is the pH range within which
165
µ is larger than a half of 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 . (2) pH substrate-speciation effect: local pH values determine FA/FNA
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speciation from total NH4+/NO2-. The speciation between ionized/unionized species is assumed at
167
instantaneous equilibrium.33
168
𝑆𝐹𝐴 =
169
where 𝐾𝑎,𝑁𝐻3 and 𝐾𝑎,𝑁𝑂2 are dissociation equilibrium constants of ammonium and nitrous acid, respectively
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(0.000794 and 628.96 μmol/L (33 ℃, 1 atm)). Substrate-speciation will result in differential degrees of
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FA/FNA inhibition.
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2.3 Sensitivity Analysis and Parameter Estimation
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To investigate the most determinant parameters on reactor performance, a sensitivity analysis was performed.
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Initial values of kinetic parameters were taken from ASMN model.28 The optimal pH ranges for AOB and
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NOB growth kinetics (pHopt and ω) were from Park et al..13 The temperature correction for µmax and bmax are
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from Hao et al..34 The MSNBM was first run in continuous aeration with default values for 300 days to
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achieve a stable nitrifying biofilm. Then a local sensitivity analysis was performed after switching to
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intermittent aeration- giving individual parameter a 100% value change while all others remained constant.27
𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 2
𝜋
{1 + 𝑐𝑜𝑠 [𝜔 · (𝑝𝐻 − 𝑝𝐻𝑜𝑝𝑡 )]}
𝐾𝑎,𝑁𝐻3 ·𝑆𝑁𝐻4 𝑆𝐻
𝑆𝐹𝑁𝐴 =
|𝑝𝐻 − 𝑝𝐻𝑜𝑝𝑡 | < 𝜔
𝑆𝑁𝑂2 ·𝑆𝐻 𝐾𝑎,𝑁𝑂2
(5)
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𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑖𝑛 −𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑒𝑓𝑓
%),
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Reactor performances were evaluated in terms of ammonium removal efficiency (ARE,
180
nitrate production efficiency (NaE,
181
NOB fraction (fNOB, 𝑁𝑂𝐵+𝐴𝑂𝐵 %). The normalized sensitivity function is defined as,
182
2 𝛿𝑗 = √𝑎𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑔𝑒(𝑆𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖,𝑗 ) 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑆𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖,𝑗 = 𝑝𝑖,𝑗 ∆𝑝 ,
183
where 𝛿𝑗 , 𝑦𝑗 and pi,j are the sensitivity function, the output reactor performances (ARE, NaE, NE or fNOB),
184
and the input parameters, respectively. Sensi,j was evaluated at different times during the aeration cycles
185
(time interval of 0.01 day) and at 20 equidistant points within the biofilm or 1 point in the bulk phase. The
186
averaged value was considered in the sensitivity analysis and parameter sensitivity was ranked for each
187
targeted performance metric. We focused on biokinetic and stoichiometric parameters related to AOB and
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NOB, as HB parameters are of secondary importance in nitrifying biofilms.35
189
The most sensitive parameters were calibrated with steady state experimental data. The model calibration
190
was carried out by trial and error through adjusting the parameter values one by one to minimize the fitting
191
error. Root mean squared error was used to assess the quality of model-data fit as the objective function,
192
RMSE = √𝑎𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑔𝑒(∑𝑗 ∑𝑖(
193
where j is the targeted variable measured or estimated (NH4 , NO2 , NO3 and DO), i is a sample point along
194
biofilm depth (i =20). The model was validated with additional experimental data from this MABR and
195
experimental data from a separate membrane-aerated biofilm reactor (MABR2) operated under 4 different
196
ammonium surface loadings (Table S5, detailed description of the experimental data used in model
197
calibration and validation).36 The calibrated parameters were checked by comparing RMSE in the calibration
198
with RMSE in the validation and the Janus coefficient (J) was calculated,37
199
𝐽2 =
200
2.4 Model Simulations
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The calibrated MSNBM was run in 3 scenarios (Table S6, detailed description of each simulation scenario):
𝑆𝑁𝑂3,𝑒𝑓𝑓 𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑖𝑛 −𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑒𝑓𝑓
%), nitritation efficiency (NE,
𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑖𝑛 𝑆𝑁𝑂2,𝑒𝑓𝑓
𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑖𝑛 −𝑆𝑁𝐻4,𝑒𝑓𝑓
%) and
𝑁𝑂𝐵
∆𝑦𝑗
(7)
𝑖,𝑗
𝑦𝑚𝑜𝑑𝑒𝑙,𝑖,𝑗 −𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑎𝑠,𝑖,𝑗 2 ) ) 𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑎𝑠,𝑗,𝑎𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑔𝑒
(8)
+
-
𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸𝑣𝑎𝑙 2 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸𝑐𝑎𝑙 2
-
(9)
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(1) To validate the model with extra experimental data, the calibrated MSNBM was ran in intermittent
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aeration (6-hour aeration period and 6-hour non-aeration period) under different NH4 surface loadings or in
204
continuous aeration in a batch test. Then the determinant factor(s) that govern NOB suppression in this
205
MABR was explored with the validated model.
206
(2) To clarify why NOB suppression occurred after switching to intermittent aeration from continuous
207
aeration, the model was run in continuous aeration to achieve a nitrifying biofilm, then aeration was switched
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to the same intermittent aeration as scenario 1.
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(3) To optimize the operational window for nitritation in intermittently aerated MABRs, different
210
intermittent aeration strategies and influent concentrations were simulated in MSNBM after achieving a
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nitrifying biofilm in continuous aeration. The effects of aeration intermittency and residual NH4 (FA)
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concentrations on NOB suppression were evaluated.
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Results and Discussion
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3.1 Model Calibration and Evaluation
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A sensitivity function, considering the sum of reactor performances (ARE, NaE, NE and fNOB), was
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𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 , followed by 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 , 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 , calculated to rank parameters (Figure S2). The most sensitive parameter is 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥
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𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 , 𝐾𝑂2 and 𝐾𝑂2 . The ranking shows that µmax is the most determinant among all kinetic parameters in
218
nitrogen conversion simulations. It is consistent with the sensitivity analysis of Wang et al.35 who ranked
219
kinetic parameters in terms of nitritation performance and biofilm development in nitrifying biofilm reactors.
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The higher sensitivity regarding performance within the biofilm (Figure S2B) versus the bulk (Figure S2A)
221
suggests that in-situ microprofiling data is more informative in model calibration than bulk measurements,
222
which were typically used.22,38 Therefore, microprofiling measurements (NH4+, NO2-, NO3- and DO) in the
223
first aeration hour at steady state were used to calibrate sensitive parameter(s). Microprofiles in the last
224
aeration hour (NH4+, NO2-, NO3- and DO) and bulk profiles during an intermittent aeration cycle (NH4+, NO2-,
225
NO3-, DO and pH) representing the reactor performance at steady-state were used for validation. Additional
226
validation of the model and its parameter estimates was obtained by fitting the initial reactor performance
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(NH4 , NO2 and NO3 ) when operated in batch start-up mode, and by fitting the biofilm performance (NH4 ,
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NO2 , NO3 and pH) of a separately operated MABR under different NH4 surface loadings.
229
𝐴𝑂𝐵 By fitting the most sensitive parameter- 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 in the reported range,12 the RMSE decreased to 0.5 and the
230
𝑁𝑂𝐵 deviation in NO3 fitting contributed the most to the error. Thus, the next most sensitive parameter- 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 - in
231
NO3 sensitivity ranking (Figure S3) was added to the calibration and RMSE decreased to 0.1. Values of
232
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 and 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 were within a reasonable range: the estimated maximum growth rates at the optimal pH were
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2.35 d-1 for AOB and 2.15 d-1 for NOB (Table 1). In the data fitting, the error function was bounded, but
234
𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐴𝑂𝐵 and 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 were highly correlated indicating a poorly identifiable parameter set. Model evaluations 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥
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𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 were, however, not affected by changes in the 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 (2.35-2.85) and 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 (2.15-2.55) best-fit parameter
236
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 value region (Figure S3D, approximate >99% confidence region: 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 2.25-2.95 and 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 2.06-2.66).
237
Predicted microprofiles agree with measurements in the first aeration hour at steady state (Figure 1A): NH4
238
is consumed along biofilm depth and NO2 is produced; NO3 remains at lower concentrations than NO2
239
within the biofilm; DO penetrates 60 µm into the biofilm base. The greatest divergence in the overall fitting
240
corresponds to NO2 at the biofilm base (6 mg-N/L) but only overestimates FNA concentrations by 0.002
241
mg-N/L. Errors in DO fitting at the membrane-biofilm interface (6.6 mg/L predicted versus 1.7 mg/L
242
measured) have a minor influence on the oxygen competition between AOB and NOB (Table S4), consistent
243
with Lackner and Smets39 who reported that oxygen concentrations at interfaces were not decisive in
244
nitritation performance in MABRs. Additionally, uncertainty in measuring the interface DO could be caused
245
by microbial activities on the membrane and an efficiency factor E (1.3 ~ 4.3) was suggested to correct
246
measured values.36
247
MSNBM predicts consistent profiles in the different model validations. It predicted lower NH4+ and higher
248
NO2- within the biofilm in the last aeration hour (Figure 1B) and uniform dynamic variations of bulk
249
concentrations during a 12-hour intermittent aeration cycle. For example, it captured the pH decreases in the
250
6-hour aeration phase and increases in the 6-hour non-aeration phase (Figure 1C). It also predicted
251
simultaneous production of NO2- and NO3- in the batch mode data validation (Figure S4A) and predicted
252
NH4+ consumption and NO2- production following the tendencies observed in MABR2 (Figure S4B). Janus
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coefficients were around 1.9 (± 0.5), showing that the RMSEs were within the same order of magnitude in
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calibration and validations.
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3.2 Model-based Exploration of NOB Suppression in Intermittently Aerated MABRs
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NOB suppression is the result of indirect and direct (competitive) interactions between AOB and NOB in the
257
local environment. Net microbial activities are captured in the specific growth rates: biomass types with the
258
higher specific growth rate will win the local competition. In the studied system, oxygen was provided
259
intermittently from membrane lumen. The biomass type with the higher specific growth rate (AOB or NOB)
260
thus dominated the oxygen utilization.
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Consistent with experimental reactor operations, simulations were initiated with fully-nitrifying biomass and
262
subject to intermittent aeration. Both simulation and experimental data showed that after 2 weeks in
263
intermittent aeration bulk N concentrations became stable, especially NO3 was below 1 mg-N/L indicating
264
efficient suppression of NOB activity (Figure S9). To illustrate the competition in the first nitrifying stage,
265
profiles of specific growth rates of AOB and NOB during an aeration cycle (6 hours) are plotted at day 15
266
(Figure 2A). The averaged µ at time intervals shows kinetic variations over time: (1) 0-15 minutes, with the
267
onset of aeration microbial activities recover from the previous non-aeration period and increase
268
dramatically; (2) 15-180 minutes, AOB activity becomes stable, while NOB activity still recovers; (3) 180-
269
360 minutes, both AOB and NOB activity reach pseudo steady state. The model shows the ratio of 𝜇𝐴𝑂𝐵 to
270
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝜇𝑁𝑂𝐵 increases in the intermittent aeration, compared to the ratio of 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 to 𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 in continuous aeration
271
(1.5±0.15 versus 1.1). AOB preferentially utilize oxygen to support growth while NOB are outcompeted or
272
their activity is suppressed.
273
To assess the relative contribution of DO/pH effects on NOB suppression, individual factors influencing
274
growth rates were calculated spatially (at different biofilm depths) and temporally (at different times during
275
the cycle). Considering the effective DO penetration depth, only results in the first 100-μm at the biofilm
276
base are shown (Figure 2B).
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DO Limitation in NOB Suppression
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O2 is a growth substrate for both AOB and NOB. In counter-diffusion biofilms O2 is provided via the lumen
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and NH4 via the bulk. In the biofilm, DO penetrates only 60 μm during aeration periods with the highest
280
concentration at the membrane-biofilm interface (biofilm depth= 0 µm), presenting spatial variations (Figure
281
S5A). Besides, DO varies over time during aeration cycles. DO at the membrane-biofilm interface is 0 mg/L
282
at the onset of aeration and quickly increases to the maximum concentration within 15 minutes. Afterwards,
283
DO concentrations within the biofilm remain stable until the end of aeration.
284
The DO limitation effect was evaluated based on oxygen concentrations within the biofilm (Figure 2B, 1-
285
DO limitation). In aeration periods, during the first 15 minutes DO strongly limits both AOB and NOB
286
activities. During the following period, the limitation is alleviated as DO increases and stabilizes, but still
287
remains strong above 30 µm. With a lower DO affinity NOB are more oxygen-limited than AOB. However,
288
the relatively stronger limitation to NOB is insignificant in its suppression. Model results show that oxygen
289
transfer and its diffusion mostly affects NH4 oxidation efficiency rather than nitritation efficiency (Table
290
S7).
291
pH-enzyme Effect on NOB Suppression
292
Because pH affects AOB/NOB kinetics directly and indirectly, it is necessary to incorporate pH effects in
293
models.14,40 Here MSNBM predicts local pH values within the biofilm and the response to transient aeration
294
phases (Figure S5B). While measurements showed that bulk pH remained relatively stable (±0.2), pH within
295
the biofilm, especially in the DO-penetrated zone, showed considerable variations (±0.6). At the onset of
296
aeration the model indicates a transient pH upshift at the biofilm base (0-15 minutes). The accumulated
297
alkalinity is attributed to continuous CO2 diffusion from the biofilm base to the membrane lumen where N2
298
gas flows through in the previous non-aeration period and slight denitrification activities. As aeration
299
continues, pH decreases due to proton production associated with NH4 oxidation. Simulations predict that
300
pH within the biofilm becomes lower than in the bulk after 1-hour aeration and decreases slowly afterwards.
301
At the end of aeration pH at the biofilm base is 0.4 units lower than the average bulk pH, which will increase
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again in the following non-aerated phase. Thus pH varies periodically in the intermittently aerated biofilms,
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a pattern similar but slower than DO variations.
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The pH-enzyme effect was assessed based on local pH values (Figure 2B, 2- pH-enzyme effect). It favors
305
NOB growth over AOB as NOB have a lower pHopt (NOB: 7.7 versus AOB: 8.4) and pH varies in the
306
optimal range for its growth. Moreover, the pH-enzyme effect is also insignificant in the overall AOB/NOB
307
competition due to their robust growth in broad pH ranges and the relatively small pH variations in the
308
system.
309
pH Substrate-speciation Effects on NOB Suppression
310
FA/FNA concentrations rely on pH values as well as total NH4 /NO2 concentrations. In counter-diffusion
311
biofilms, NH4 , provided via the bulk, is oxidized at the biofilm base producing NO2 which diffuses
312
backward into the bulk.10 Based on ionic N concentrations, FA and FNA speciation synchronizes with pH
313
variations (Figure S5C and S5D). For instance, at the onset of aeration FA concentration is high due to NH4
314
and alkalinity accumulation from the previous non-aeration period. During the following aeration period, FA
315
concentration decreases, as pH drops and NH4 consumption continues. On the other hand, FNA shows
316
reversed variations: increasing as aeration progresses and with biofilm depth as a result of the proton and
317
NO2 production.
318
The pH substrate-speciation effect was assessed based on FA/FNA concentrations within the biofilm (Figure
319
2B, 3- FA/FNA inhibition). During the first 15 minutes, FA strongly inhibits AOB/NOB microbial activities
320
(FA > KI,FA). Afterwards, the inhibition is alleviated as FA decreases. Noticeably, FA inhibits AOB and
321
NOB in different ways: the inhibition effect remains strong for NOB throughout the aeration period (from
322
0.26 to 0.62), while it obviously weakens for AOB (from 0.54 to 0.89). FA inhibition rapidly becomes the
323
most determinant factor in suppressing NOB over AOB. As FNA concentrations are always an order of
324
magnitude lower than KI,FNA, its inhibition effect on microbial activities is always minor thereby contributing
325
little to NOB suppression.
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Besides the inhibitor effect (𝐾𝐼 /(𝐾𝐼 + 𝑆)), FA/FNA exhibit the substrate limitation effect (𝑆/(𝐾𝑆 + 𝑆)) in
327
biological processes (Equation 2). However, FA and FNA concentrations are far above the substrate
328
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 affinities (𝐾𝐹𝐴 and 𝐾𝐹𝑁𝐴 ) in the system, making the substrate limitation effects negligible.
329
Implication of Model-based NOB Suppression
330
Overall, FA inhibition caused by pH substrate-speciation is the crucial factor in suppressing NOB in the
331
intermittently aerated biofilm reactors. Nitritation success is insensitive to oxygen affinity constants or DO
332
concentrations at the membrane-biofilm interface- a conclusion different from previous studies.41,42 Downing
333
and Nerenberg22 suggested manipulating interface DO as an effective method to control shortcut nitrification
334
in MABRs: with a lower interface DO, more NO2 accumulated. However, their biofilms performed at low
335
nitrification rates with a low influent NH4 concentration- 3 mg-N/L, suggesting little FA inhibition and no
336
NO2 accumulation or significant pH gradients. The single DO gradient within the biofilm present the
337
interface DO as a key role in nitritation success. This method might not apply for N-rich wastewater
338
treatment. For example Lackner and Smets39 concluded that nitritation success based only on interface DO
339
was not possible in a counter-diffusion biofilm with high influent NH4 concentrations (20-800 mg-N/L), and
340
nitritation efficiency was not predicted from oxygen affinity constants.
341
Counter- and co-diffusion biofilms have different mechanisms of NOB suppression due to different spatial
342
structures and population distributions.35,38,39 In counter-diffusion biofilms, the theoretically optimal habitat
343
for NOB is the biofilm base, where both SO2/KO2 and SFNA/KFNA have the highest values. By contrast, the
344
base is not the optimal for AOB growth, as SO2/KO2 and SFA/KFA cannot have the maximum at the same
345
spatial position. Outcompeting NOB can be more difficult in counter-diffusion over co-diffusion biofilms,
346
where microbes (AOB and NOB) share the optimal habitats at the biofilm top near the biofilm/liquid
347
interphase. Others have similarly observed that NOB could survive better in counter- versus co- diffusion
348
biofilms, even when operated under constant oxygen limited (DO < 0.1 mg/L) and high pH (8.0-8.3)
349
conditions in the bulk.35 The inherent system geometry of membrane-aerated biofilms complicates NOB
350
inhibition/washout. Besides, when applying intermittent aeration, periodic pH variations at the biofilm base
351
exert a significant effect on NOB dynamics in counter-diffusion biofilms because of continuous CO2
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diffusion to the gas lumen. However, such pH variations are not expected in co-diffusion biofilms. Many
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studies have highlighted the benefits of low DO with high FA to maintain shortcut NH4 removal in co-
354
diffusion biofilms.17,43 Park et al.3 explored simultaneous effects of DO and FA/FNA in lab-scale co-
355
diffusion nitrifying biofilms, and found that NO2 accumulated due to DO limitation or FA inhibition and
356
long-term NOB suppression could not be maintained without DO limitation involved. The results were
357
consistent with Brockmann and Morgenroth44 who suggested that oxygen limitation was the main
358
mechanism for NOB suppression and FA inhibition was not necessarily required in co-diffusion biofilms.
359
However, DO limitation in nitritation counter-diffusion biofilms appears not as significant as reported for co-
360
diffusion biofilms, consistent with the observation that nitritation could not be achieved by solely
361
manipulating air pressure in the membrane lumen in MABRs.21
362
3.3 Potential explanation of NOB Suppression in the study of Pellicer-Nàcher et al. (2010)
363
To answer why NO2 accumulated after switching from continuous to intermittent aeration in MABRs,
364
simulations were carried out with the calibrated MSNBM in continuous aeration for 200 days followed by
365
intermittent aeration (6-hour aeration and 6-hour non-aeration cycles). The simulation shows a nitrifying
366
biofilm during continuous aeration (NE = 0%) indicating no NOB suppression (Table 2- continuous
367
aeration). After switching to intermittent aeration the model predicts NOB suppression- NO3 decrease and
368
NE increase (Table 2- strategy A, Figure S6). To find the critical factor for NOB suppression, variations of
369
individual pH/DO effect on AOB/NOB competition were assessed: each effect
370
aeration (for instance at day 215) was normalized by its value during continuous aeration. A value higher
371
than 1 means the effect favors NOB suppression in intermittent aeration, and lower than 1 that it favors NOB
372
growth.
373
Only FA inhibition is identified to favor NO2 accumulation after switching the aeration strategy, while DO
374
limitation, pH-enzyme effect and FNA inhibition remain unchanged (Figure S7). FA inhibition shows certain
375
varying patterns in intermittent aeration: (1) it is overall enhanced due to an increased residual NH4 ; (2) it is
376
particularly strong during the first 15 minutes of aeration. The simulated increase of residual NH4+ after
377
changing to intermittent aeration was also observed in the study of Pellicer-Nàcher et al.:21 in reactor B bulk
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𝑒𝑓𝑓𝑒𝑐𝑡𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑒𝑓𝑓𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑁𝑂𝐵
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NH4+ increased by 100 mg/L at stage 1 and 2 (intermittent aeration) compared to stage 0 (continuous
379
aeration). Compared to continuous aeration, MABRs in intermittent aeration display a tradeoff between
380
NH4 removal efficiency and nitritation efficiency (Table 2). Nitritation is assisted by the evaluated residual
381
NH4 , which underlines the importance of a minimum NH4 concentration in the bulk. Pérez et al.18 also
382
highlighted the need for minimum residual NH4 for NOB suppression in co-diffusion biofilms, but
383
attributed the nitritation success to differential oxygen limitation rather than FA inhibition- as NOB were
384
outcompeted due to the strong oxygen limiting conditions imposed by a high residual NH 4 . The strong FA
385
inhibition at the onset of aeration is due to pH upshifts at the biofilm base in the previous anoxic phases. It
386
causes a longer lag phase of NOB activity over AOB, which could be another reason in the nitritation
387
success. Theoretically, NOB locate at the biofilm base, if enriched in MABRs, thus pH upshift at the base is
388
more efficient to prompt FA inhibition than increasing bulk pH. This lag phase has also been observed in
389
other intermittently aerated systems.45,46 Kornaros et al.47 and Gilbert et al.48 attributed the lag phase to a long
390
(enzyme) reactivation time in NOB nitrogen metabolism after anoxic exposure in batch continuous stirred-
391
tank reactors. However, the possibility for pH variations was not considered in those studies, even though
392
CO2 stripping could slowly increase bulk pH.49
393
3.4 Nitritation in Various Intermittent Aeration Strategies
394
For an intermittent aeration system with certain NH4 /O2 surface loadings, the aeration duration determines
395
residual NH4 concentrations: a longer aeration lowers residual NH4 . The aeration intermittency determines
396
pH upshift times and the variation range of bulk concentrations: a higher frequency causes more pH upshifts
397
and a narrow variation range. This information can be utilized to optimize intermittent aeration strategies for
398
efficient nitritation in MABRs (Table 2). MSNBM simulation shows that a higher aeration intermittency can
399
accelerate NOB suppression (A and C) due to more times of pH upshift in non-aeration phases to retard
400
NOB activity while slightly affecting AOB activity, or decelerate NOB suppression (B and A) due to the
401
relatively high bulk NH4 (pH) at the onset of aeration phases even the averaged bulk concentrations are the
402
same. Longer aeration duration (D) leads to a slower nitritation process but a higher NH4 removal efficiency,
403
while keeping the same aeration intermittency. It is consistent with the observation in Mota et al.47 that
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intermittently aerated reactors with longer anoxic phase had the lower NOB abundance and relatively higher
405
NH4 effluent concentrations. Both studies suggest that the maximum aeration duration should be set to
406
ensure nitritation success in intermittent aeration, and a specific to the treated wastewater ratio of aeration to
407
non-aeration phase is needed to balance NOB suppression against NH4 removal.51 Simulation with high
408
NH4+ concentrations predicts fast nitritation in the intermittent aeration (E), and vice versa slow nitritation
409
with low influent NH4+ (F). Further simulation with low NH4+ concentrations but high bulk pH (G) shows
410
efficient nitritation, confirming a key factor in NOB suppression was bulk FA rather than residual NH 4+
411
(more simulations in Table S8). In an intermittent aeration regime, the bulk FA can provide a rapid indicator
412
of the nitritation potential of MABRs (Figure S10). MSNBM simulations reveal that aeration duration and
413
intermittency control the performance of intermittently aerated nitrifying biofilms: longer aeration duration
414
ensures a higher NH4+ removal efficiency, yet impedes NOB suppression; higher aeration intermittency
415
presents unchanged NH4+ removal performance, while its effect on NOB suppression should be evaluated
416
under specific conditions. Following this model-based analysis, experimental validation of model predictions
417
is warranted.
418
In conclusion, we provide experimental evidence that intermittent aeration supports efficient nitritation in
419
membrane aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs). A pH-explicit 1-D multispecies nitrifying biofilm model
420
(MSNBM) is developed and calibrated: model analysis reveals that NOB suppression - associated with
421
intermittent aeration - is primarily governed by periodic FA inhibition as the consequence of transient pH
422
upshifts during non-aeration. These pH upshifts are mainly caused by alkalinity increases due to CO2
423
stripping to the membrane lumen (which also occurs during aeration) plus the cessation of proton production
424
(which only occurs during aeration). In counter diffusion biofilms pH effect is more important than DO
425
(limitation) effect on NOB suppression. Both aeration intermittency and duration are effective control factors
426
to obtain nitritation success in intermittently membrane-aerated biofilms, and maintaining nitritation and
427
NH4 removal efficiency is more easily ensured if operated with high buffer capacities.
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Acknowledgement
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The authors would like to thank the China Scholarship Council (CSC) for financial support to Yunjie Ma,
430
and the Innovation Fund Denmark (IFD) (Project LaGAS, File No. 0603-00523B) for additional financial
431
support.
432
Supporting Information. More detailed information on model description, model simulations and data
433
analysis. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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Table 1. Kinetic parameter values of AOB and NOB in the calibrated model.
1
Kinetic parameters
AOB
NOB
References
𝜇𝑚𝑎𝑥 : the maximum specific growth rate, 1/d
2.35 2.721
2.15 1.751
this study
𝐾𝑂2: half-saturation coefficient for O2, mg/L
0.6
1.2
Hiatt and Grady28
𝑌: autotrophic yield, mgCOD/mgN
0.18
0.06
Hiatt and Grady28
𝐴𝑂𝐵 𝑁𝑂𝐵 𝐾𝐹𝐴 , 𝐾𝐹𝑁𝐴 : half-saturation coefficient, mg/L
0.0075
0.0001
Hiatt and Grady28
𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝐴 : free ammonia inhibition coefficient, mg/L
1
0.2
Hiatt and Grady28
𝐾𝐼,𝐹𝑁𝐴 : free nitrous acid inhibition coefficient, mg/L
0.1
0.04
Hiatt and Grady28
𝑏𝑚𝑎𝑥 : decay coefficient, 1/d
0.17
0.073
Hao et al.34
pHopt (ω): optimal pH
8.4(3.2)
7.7(2.4)
Park et al.13
default growth rates in ASMN with temperature correction (33◦C)
571
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Page 24 of 27
Table 2. Predicted nitritation efficiencies (NE, %) in various intermittent aeration strategies
Influent2 Simulation Case
+
Effluent (Bulk) +
FA3
(mg-N/L)
Buffer capacity2
(mg-N/L)
continuous
75
2.1
39
6.96
0.27
0.01
A: 6+61
75
2.1
53.0 ± 5
7.23 ± 0.15
0.71
1.004
B: 1+1
75
2.1
52.5 ± 1
7.22 ± 0.02
0.69
0.73
C: 12+12
75
2.1
53.1 ± 10
7.25 ± 0.25
0.78
0.79
D: 8+4
75
2.1
47.8 ± 4
7.14 ± 0.15
0.52
0.41
E: 6+6
100
2.1
72.0 ± 7
7.25 ± 0.15
1.02
1.74
F: 6+6
50
2.1
35.0 ± 3
7.20 ± 0.15
0.45
0.21
G: 6+6
50
5
31.2 ± 5
7.41 ± 0.10
0.64
0.83
NH4
in
NH4
pH
(mg-N/L)
NEnormalized4
573
1
574
a 6-hour non-aeration phase. 2Buffer capacity in the influent was recorded as the molar ratio of bicarbonate
575
(HCO3-) to ammonium (NH4 _N). 3FA was calculated with the averaged NH4 concentrations and bulk pH
576
during a full aeration cycle (equation 6). 4For a clear comparison, NE was normalized to the Nitritation
577
efficiency in the default simulation case A (NE = 48.5%). MSNBM was run in continuous aeration (200 days)
578
to achieve a mature nitrifying biofilm, followed by various intermittent aeration strategies: (A-D) different
579
intermittent aeration but the same influent; (A,E-G) the same aeration intermittency but different influent
580
concentrations. NEs in the NOB suppression process in intermittent aeration were recorded (e.g. at day 215)
581
(Table S6). In simulations E-G, oxygen loadings proportionally varied with NH4 influent concentrations
582
(more simulations in Table S8).
Aeration strategy 6+6 meant a 12-hour intermittent aeration cycle consisting of a 6-hour aeration phase and
+
+
+
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583 584
Figure 1. Experimental (discrete symbols) and predicted (line) concentrations in MABR at steady state (A)
585
microprofiles in the first aeration hour, (B) microprofiles in the last aeration hour, and (C) bulk profiles
586
during a 12-hour intermittent aeration cycle. For each micro profile, replicates (n>3) were made and the
587
average was shown.
588
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589 590
Figure 2. A- Specific growth rates of AOB and NOB within the biofilm in a 6-hour aeration period at day 15
591
(AOB- black, NOB- red). B- Individual effect on AOB and NOB within the 100μm-aerated biofilm base in a
592
6-hour aeration period at day 15. (0- strong limitation/inhibition effect, 1- no limitation/inhibition effect)
593
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594
595 596
TOC- Graphical abstract
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